Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
>On 24.02 09:53, Askar wrote:
>  
>
>>we have these three cache directories, squid/cache working fine expect 
>>two things.
>>    
>>
>
>  
>
>>1) I want to store objects in these three directories in round-robin
>>fashion. even though I had enable "store_dir_select_algorithm
>>round-robin" in squid.conf however still I can see squid storing objects
>>in cache1. After putting "store_dir_select_algorithm round-robin" in
>>squid.conf , I just give squid -k reconfigure.
>>    
>>
>
>did you run 'squid -z' after you created new cache_dir's?
>
>  
>
>>/dev/sda6              26G  2.4G   24G  10% /cache1
>>    
>>
>
>  
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>>/dev/sdb1              16G   81M   16G   1% /cache2
>>/dev/sdb2              16G   81M   16G   1% /cache3
>>    
>>
>
>seems you have two cache_dir's on two partitions of the same disk. That is
>very ineffective
>
>  
>
>>2) this is P3, 1200MHz Dell machine , and squid is taking upto 70% of 
>>cpu during peak hours.
>>cache_dir diskd /cache1/....
>>cache_dir diskd /cache2/....
>>cache_dir diskd /cache3/....
>>    
>>
>
>these say nothing about reasons why squid takes that much ram. From what I
>see in this list, big CPU usage is usually caused by ineffective ACL
>setup.
>
>  
>
hi henrik and matus thanks for your reply, okay i just restarted the 
machine, now im waiting for the result of df -lh :)
Matus, its not the RAM but cpu, squid taking too much cpu cycles i-e 
upto 70% sometime during peak hours and this is for sure not normal coz  
we have other cache servers running running very smooth.
regards
Received on Thu Feb 24 2005 - 03:13:37 MST
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